Saturday, 7 March 2026

LIST 244 - 07/03/2026

Hello again,

(Quite a lengthy preamble even by my standards this week – feel free to scroll past if you’d rather be listening already than reading).

“I don’t know who needs to hear this”, wrote one John Girgus in an open Facebook post in April 2022, “but Sarah Records is over. 

"It’s cool to remember and appreciate the music, but to go on like it’s still a relevant, active label and that the artists are still somehow a music scene, we kind of had that chance 20-25 years ago. 

"[…] Now I watch the same people try to start the whole thing up again after decades, every few years. Maybe I can offer some helpful advice from my experience: It's not going to happen. Let it go”.

Even without considering that being relevant and being a scene aren’t necessarily one and the same thing, there has never been a point in the 31 years and counting since Sarah closed that a claim of “it’s over” would have withstood maximum scrutiny.

Think Shinkansen Records forming from the ashes of Sarah within a year, taking East River Pipe, Blueboy, Harvey Williams and Bobby Wratten with it.

Think Heavenly releasing another corking album in 1996 before tragic events close to home prompted a hiatus.

Think Secret Shine whacking out three albums in five years at the start of the new century, and recording and touring to this day.

Think The Orchids’ glorious returns, and endless victory lap as indiepop’s favourite cuddly, socially conscious, tipsy uncles.

Think of Orlando’s Dickon Edwards’ bright, engaging and often killingly funny Fosca pop project.

Think the aforementioned Heavenly’s transformations into Marine Research, thence Tender Trap, thence Catenary Wires.

Think the Sarah tour which brought Even As We Speak and Boyracer back to these shores, and Action Painting! out of cold storage.

Think the My Secret World film and exhibition.

Think The Hit Parade’s relative stardom in the Far East.

Think St Christopher never really stopping.

Think The Sweetest Ache's lowish key return to the live fold.

Think two dedicated books. 

Think Jane Duffus’s glossy fanzines.

Think Nick Godfrey’s tireless efforts to license and sell Sarah (and other) bands' radio sessions as beautiful physical artefacts.

Think of all of the other Sarah or Sarah-adjacent projects my rapid brainstorm will inevitably have missed.

Think, also, of the further decade or so’s post-Sarah existence – replete with appearance in Buffy the Vampire Slayer – of late period act Aberdeen, co-founded and co-fronted by… one John Girgus, whose relationship with former band members, and with the wider indiepop cognoscenti in general, has become that bit more strained the more trenchantly he has espoused his mutually incompatible political views. 

I’ll leave others to decide whether this is coincidental.

Either way, the point is that there's never yet been too sizeable a gap with no activity at all by somebody Sarah-oriented.  There have been quieter periods, sure, as is only to be expected when the vicissitudes of life, growing up, starting families, changing careers and the rest of it necessarily intervene.

If the accuracy of a Sarah-is-dead pronouncement was already moot in 2022, however, it's completely at odds with a particularly productive last four years of alumni activity. Lightning in a Twilight Hour, Heavenly and related have already been touched upon since That Music List returned. Today it’s the turn of Blueboy.

Although with the propensity to vary their sound and subject matter as much as stablemates The Field Mice, Blueboy’s eclecticism in three and a half decades’ worth of on-and-off output seems to have been overlooked in comparison.

Perhaps some of the styles attempted just haven’t had the cool of some of Bobby Wratten and co.’s choices (the Loops, the New Orders, and so on), or perhaps the band has wanted for the same compelling background narrative of boiling sexual fury between band members. 

In giving Blueboy the Session Of Sorts treatment here, I was very conscious of putting that first detail in particular to right.

Hence the absence of the obvious go-to fuzzed-up indiepop singles such as Loveblind and Popkiss.

Hence, instead, a track – taken from last year’s appropriately varied comeback album A Life In Numbers – which will surely delight anyone who regards 1989-1992 as Lush’s imperial phase (your writer raises his hand); the almost sophisti-pop opener to the Bank of England album from the band’s Cath Close-fronted period (which would also beget the bossa nova stylings of side project Beaumont); and the late Keith Girdler sounding to the manner born as a Neil Tennant-alike electronic pop vocalist on the magical Sarah b-side Hit.

It was interesting to read in a recent online interview with Paul Stewart and Gemma Malley how powerful a live proposition they believed Blueboy had become as the early-mid 1990s progressed, and the Bikini live EP of tracks performed in concert in Toulouse in 1994 - from which I have included Sea Horses - backs up their assertion most compellingly. 

It also serves as a welcome reminder of Keith’s often delicious sense of humour – “Steven is writing / Steven is writhing” and “There’s more to me than you think”. It, and him, remain much missed.

The good news for lovers of the Bikini EP is that the Aquavinyle label which released it has resurrected itself after decades of inactivity, and will release the Toulouse concert in its entirety on a white vinyl longplayer entitled Jimmy on the 20th of this month. If the abnormally good sound quality of the EP translates across the entire album, it should be outstanding. No checking online setlist aggregators to see what’s on it, though. That’s cheating.

Mentioned further up the page, Even As We Speak get their first airing since TML came back this week, as a means with which to launch another new semi-regular feature - Goodier Before Wiley and Lamacq, where "before" has a double meaning.

We all have our own favourite presenters of or entry points to particular longstanding programmes, TV or radio; and whether it’s a popular view or not, my favourite era of listening to the Evening Session on Radio 1 was when Mark Goodier was at the helm.

Guileless is not a word often thrown around as a compliment, but I absolutely mean it as one when considering Goodier’s choices for the show between 1990 and 1993. And I do assume they were mainly his, considering he and successors Jo Wiley and Steve Lamacq shared a producer in Jeff Smith (at least initially; Smith would ascend far loftier heights from 1994).

The more cynical cool of the latter duo was simply absent from Goodier’s puppy dog enthusiastic delivery and his record box, and there were things he played that, had Wylie and Lamacq already been installed, I believe would never have got a look in.

Industrial acts such as KMFDM or Skyscraper. The classical music sampling breakbeat dance of Nu-Tek. A genuinely fantastic ragga-tinged skronk from the by then commercially busted flush Adamski. The slow pummelling of Mad Cow Disease. The stop-start hardcore of John & Julie. And, on occasion, acts from a Sarah Records label whose status as pariah among the music inkies and those who wrote for them was virtually irreversible by then (let’s not pretend that Wiley and Lamacq’s subsequent endorsement of Action Painting!’s Mustard Gas was predicated on much beyond its shared musical DNA with the New Wave of New Wave du jour).

I have never seen track listings published anywhere for 1990s Evening Session shows in the same way as they have been for John Peel, but for those of us who remember the time it’s difficult to overstate how much Goodier loved Falling Down the Stairs by Even As We Speak. Properly went for it. Played on every show for at least a week went for it.

I have no idea whether the band or Sarah Records were enamoured with his suggestion that they should get a bigger label to license the song and score them a major hit, but it came from a well-meaning place; and for someone, anyone, that much to the fore of new music broadcasting at the time to be as kindly disposed to any Sarah output was as noteworthy as it was rare.

Hmmm, that's 1,300 words about a label that's apparently over.  I can't be doing this right.

Just to finish on Wiley and Lamacq before moving on.  You're not going to find (m)any of their most commonly endorsed Britpop era acts on TML, and having already prattled on for so long this week I won't go into the nuts and bolts of why.  Suffice it to say that my views on the whole Britpop era align far more with those of the likes of the late Neil Kulkarni (if without the sexually aggressive swearing) than ever they have those two broadcasters, and ever will.

Enough about the recent proliferation of Britpop retrospective radio and stage shows, thirtieth anniversary releases of key albums of the time, etc. has rather driven home the point to me that history is generally written, and indeed sometimes revised, by the victors.  

And I do mean revised.  Tracks from Elastica's 1995 self-titled debut album, as released on Lamacq's own Deceptive label, still command regular plays on BBC Radio 6 Music out of all proportion relative to its merits.  To this pair of ears, current Dry Cleaning tracks such as Cruise Ship Designer get way closer to distilling the abstruse, angular, oddball essence of early Wire than Elastic ever managed.

More pertinent to this week's List selections, I reminded myself that in correctly mourning the passing of Food Records co-founder Andy Ross, Lamacq incorrectly opined on air that it was Ross "who'd discovered Shampoo".  

That must have come as news to the Manic Street Preachers, who featured Jacqui Blake and Carrie Askew on the 1992 promo for Little Baby Nothing; or else to Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs of Saint Etienne, who signed the duo to their boutique label Icerink in 1993 and put out their opening two singles some time before Food came calling.  The first of those is included in this week's List.

Do I give him the benefit of the doubt and presume he actually meant "signed" rather than "discovered", to stop me giving myself paroxysms into old age over such matters (see also older chestnuts such as the misappropriation of "indie")?

Much else to enjoy this week, including:

Immaculate New Order-on-a-budget stylings from early Elefant Records heroes Family (I'm pretty sure this is a particular favourite of that Pete Green, but apologies if not, Pete),

My first Armchair Raver selection (T99), by no means the only track you'll be hearing from Olivier Abbeloos in the near future,






J xx





DOCH DER COUNTDOWN LÄUFT


I WAS AN ARMCHAIR RAVER


GOODIER BEFORE WILEY & LAMACQ


COMPILED BY CHET & BEE (AND SOMETIMES TIM)






IN LOVING MEMORY: Sly Dunbar


Saturday, 28 February 2026

LIST 243 - 28/02/2026

Hello again,

First up, here's something for you TML nostalgia buffs.  With a few minutes of spare time last night, I revisited the very first List from almost exactly seventeen years ago, retested all of the links (most of them needed replacing, in truth), and gave the whole thing the same treatment as I apply to new Lists, nested videos and soforth.  All much easier to navigate than first time around, and if I do say so myself, the song choices mostly hold up even now.  Feel free to take a look, and a listen.  Have fun.

As regards this week's choices, two more features seeing the light of day for the first time today are A Session of Sorts and Bulletproof.  

The former is, I suppose, simply a neat way of sharing four songs not previously included on a List by the same artist or performer, stretching across the entirety of their careers wherever possible.  And on this, the twentieth year of a career determinedly forged on their terms and their alone, Lancaster's finest sweary, red wine-marinaded husband and wife DIY psychedelic punk combo The Lovely Eggs are as deserving candidates as any.  Long may they prosper.

Bulletproof may evoke thoughts of Pop Will Eat Itself among some of you, and yes, I expect the early-mid 1990s Oldham club night which gives this feature its name was equally inspired by that leave-your-brain-at-the-door stomp by Stourbridge's finest.  It's Senser, however, that get a run out this time, Eject still a towering example of the rap-rock crossover genre du jour.

Now a mere 33 years of age (and how old does that make me feel typing that), it's unarguably of its time, but what an invigorating, exciting time that was.

The aforementioned Lovely Eggs - spoiler alert - will make an appearance in the Favourite Song of the Year feature at some point before long, although I'll leave you to guess what year and what song.  It's a short trip back to 2023 for today's favourite, a meeting of active minds between Ben, son of entertainer Roy, and Matt Berry in full Bonzo's The Intro and the Outro mode.  

Playful, self-effacing (there's at least the acknowledgement that not everyone gets jazz, even if Berry then shoots them down in familiar fashion) and not overstaying its welcome, it's also just about the only thing you'll see on here this week ever to have found its way into a question on Radio 4's Counterpoint (on which my scores continue to increase gently - I'm still not going on it, though).

The simple act of gathering all of the material used or intended for use in this blog's original 2009-2018 run into one Google Doc recently has proven a useful exercise, not least in surfacing a slew of tracks I could have sworn I'd included before now but actually never had.  

Hence, at long last, Mary Bobbins by Gabrielles Wish, at least as much of a cult Manchester act as The Fall, if not more so, and with a not dissimilar (if generally less acrimonious) revolving door of members pivoting around founder and sole constant presence Robert Corless.  

The Rob's Records mid-1990s incarnation of the band represented here remains my firm favourite, a feverish, tense post-punk brew enriched by the sound effect treatments of then member David Peplow (the same David Peplow who lectures here in Sheffield these days?  I wonder...).  Within the confines of a small venue such as the Star & Garter in Manchester, where I saw them support Half Man Half Biscuit and Calvin Party, it made for an intense listening experience.  The almost pop stylings of over a decade and a half later, not so much.

Other things to enjoy this week include, but are absolutely not limited to:

  • Tracks from opposite ends of the career of the recently reactivated Would-Be-Goods, Jessica Griffins' singular Received Pronunciation delivery and ear for a tune both still present and correct decades on,
  • A splendid late single from Fosca, the post-Orlando vehicle from academic, diarist and flaneur Dickon Edwards and another act hitherto hideously underrepresented in this blog,
  • Форум, reckoned to be the first synthpop act in Russia.  I'd been in two minds as to whether to include them as a Eurotastic act, the desire to observe the pre-hostilities Eurovision interpretation of what comprises "Europe" wrestling with Russia's current exclusion from said contest.  Ultimately they're not appearing under that banner,
  • The same David Westlake as whose career misfortunes were referred to in the C86 book review I shared last week,
  • A small tribute to Ken Downie.

J xx


Click on the video or link to play each tune (links last checked as all working 27/02/2026).


FAVOURITE SONG OF THE YEAR: 2023


A SESSION OF SORTS: The Lovely Eggs

BULLETPROOF



A SESSION OF SORTS: The Lovely Eggs


THEN AND NOW: Would-Be-Goods



A SESSION OF SORTS: The Lovely Eggs

(NB Playback on Blogger disabled for this video - click on link to visit YouTube.  Apologies!)


IN LOVING MEMORY: Ken Downie

Sunday, 22 February 2026

LIST 242 - 22/02/2026

Hello again,

As promised, part two of this weekend's double-header.  Monsieur, with these Blogger postings you're really spoiling us, as the Ferrero Rocher lady once nearly said.

Among the new and old fare on offer this time we have the first outing of the Straight In At... feature - or to be more accurate, its first outing on That Music List.

This is something salvaged from Twitter, my engagement with which is now at the barest of bare minimums for all of the same reasons that many of yours will be also.  Straight In At... was a feed I ran on there for a few years, wherein every new entry in the Official Singles Chart on the given date in a past year was surfaced and reviewed.  

For years in the 1950s and 1960s with not even one hand's worth of new entries per week, it wasn't a hugely time-intensive exercise.  For years in the late 1990s and early 2000s with as many as 35 new songs hitting the then top 100 each week (and invariably disappearing again right away), it absolutely was.

The volume of stuff to wade through wasn't an issue for me, however.  Instead, I found myself having to think of things to write about too many songs which, with the best will in the world, I really didn't like at all.  Some people are of course of a disposition to be able to do that without it becoming wearying, and for a living at that; but I gradually found it a less than satisfying, less than optimal use of my energies.  

That's by no means a whinge - these were the parameters I'd set myself, so I had no grounds for complaint.  I just had to go there to find out it wasn't for me.

The Straight In At Twitter feed thus died a quiet death around the end of 2022, at a time when my love for music wasn't all it should have been in any event, but even then I wasn't wholly prepared to walk away from it forever.  Hence Straight In At... That Music List style, with charting songs still included from today's date in history, but just not all of them.

Four selections from February 22nd 1981, then, and no more than four.  No sign of that week's highest new entry (19) from Status Quo, as it's not a favourite.  No Walking On Thin Ice by Yoko Ono (the next highest entry but way down in position number 50 - these were very different times), as, love it as I do, it's been on at least one List already and I found other things I'd rather include for the first time.

Instead, plucked from the lowest fifth of the then top 75 we have a still just about pre-mainstream crossover Human League; an also still just about pre-mainstream crossover Classix Nouveaux; Yorkshire-born and raised Euro disco gentleman Geoffrey Bastow (appearing here under his K.I.D. alias); and finally the commercial highpoint in the career of Landscape, one which underlines as much as anything else how broad a church 1981 was in terms of what could become a hit.  It's my favourite year for chart music on that basis, an opinion which has only firmed up over time.

Six years further on from 1981 finds Hebden Bridge's finest export Bogshed in typically idiosyncratic form, and their inclusion gives me all the excuse required to include a link to a review I originally penned on Facebook two years ago of Whatever Happened to the C86 Kids?, Nige Tassell's exhaustive quest to find and interview at least one member of all 22 acts - of which Bogshed were of course one - featured on the NME's eponymous compilation cassette.  

It's an impressive, accessible piece of work, as well as at times poignant, considering the fates to have befallen some players in the piece in the four decades since C86 was released.  It's possibly not giving too much away to confirm that the quest would likely fail if commenced only in 2026.

From West Yorkshire past to West Yorkshire present, it's a pleasure to be able to include some Craven Faults for the first time here.  It can be assumed that this (by design) anonymous producer of compelling, pictorial, sometimes darkly ambient electronic music would have been as regular a fixture as any had TML not gone on its extended hiatus, given new album Sidings, from which today's selection is taken, is already an eighth in six years.

I'll eat my own arm if I haven't found a way to include some of their more extended pieces in my The Long Goodbye feature before this year's through.  Today, however, that honour goes to some classic Kraftwerk - as if there's any other kind.

From Germany to France, and the first appearance of Fabriqué en France, another new feature which showcases French and Francophone pop.  I have a correspondence a couple of years ago with the very fine Leeds indiepopper Owen Radford-Lloyd (formerly known as The French Defence) to thank for tuning me into Mylene Farmer's very early output - I'd only really picked up on her from a certain early 1990s monster European hit onwards.

The more I've explored Mylene, the more it's occurred to me how the likes of Florence Welch and Alison Goldfrapp owe at least as much to her as they do other more often cited touchstones such as Kate Bush and Noosha Fox. See what you think.

Please also feel free to enjoy the wholly unexpected return of Sugar after 32 years; a 1987-88ish cut from celebrated Zimbabwean Chigiyo pioneers Zig Zag Band; an early single of the year contender for me from Mitski; a reminder of the pristine pop wonderment of La Casa Azul, whose 2009 set is still talked about in revered tones by us Indietracks stalwarts; an example, for those not yet aware, of why Knitting Circle are one of the most vital, important acts in DIY/punk/indiepop right now (with an album very recently recorded and to follow); and a wee tribute to Jimmy Cliff.  

Actually, please feel free to enjoy it all.

J xx


Click on the video or link to play each tune (links last checked as all working 18/02/2026).




FABRIQUÉ EN FRANCE

THEN AND NOW: Sugar


IF WE DO, WE’LL KEEP IT ALIVE


STRAIGHT IN AT… February 22nd, 1981

(Bandcamp link - no video)


STRAIGHT IN AT... February 22nd, 1981





IN LOVING MEMORY: Jimmy Cliff

THE LONG GOODBYE


Saturday, 21 February 2026

That Book Review: Whatever Happened to the C86 Kids? by Nige Tassell

(NB If you've come here via a link in a List, please click on your browser Back button once you're done to return there).


For those of us with interests in racing and indiepop, this is in essence the latter's equivalent of the former's Go Down to the Beaten.

Instead of Chris Pitt finding one defeated rider from every Grand National since 1946, here Nige Tassell attempts to find one member of every band (22 of them) to have contributed to the NME's era- and (for good or ill) genre-defining cassette compilation of four decades ago.

Nige succeeds, and indeed exceeds his brief in some cases (all five original members of Mighty Mighty). Not that, admittedly, the likes of David Gedge (The Wedding Present) or Vickie Perks and Maggie Dunne (Fuzzbox) are notably hard to find nor generally anything other than wholly generous with their time for interviewers.

However, many discoveries required serendipity, patience or inexhaustible supplies of careful persistence and trust building. Stephen Pastel, for one, did reward Nige's powers of gentle persuasion in spades. Malcolm Eden (McCarthy) and Cath Carroll (Miaow), sadly, could not.

Having found his interviewees, Nige had the good sense to let them talk... and talk... For all he'd done his research beforehand, few if any preconceptions and precious little in the way of an ego influenced the line of questioning.

These were stories to be told, in full, whilst an often fleeting - and in some cases never to be repeated - opportunity had arisen.

The humanity of the interviewee is frequently as evident as that of the interviewer. A number of those approached were dealt a succession of bad hands post-C86 (many at the hands of feckless record labels) which wrecked highly promising careers - David Westlake of The Servants perhaps suffered more than any. No bitterness. 

Others still found themselves fired from their respective C86 band when assuming to be set fair - q.v. the aforementioned Wedding Present's Peter Solowka. Again, no bitterness.

Instead, a sense largely pervades of a deep gratitude to have been involved in something they love(d), captured on a compilation whose influence and legacy couldn't possibly have been anticipated at the time.

Anno domini and all that dictates that nobody associated with the book is even remotely close to young adulthood anymore. Many careers have been forged among the C86 alumni, from academia (several of these) to driving instructor (Sushil Dade of the Soup Dragons), from bicycle repair shop proprietor (David Keegan of The Shop Assistants) to Jeremy Irons' body double (Julian Hutton of The Shrubs).

All adult human life is covered, even if some of it not in particularly generous distributions. The listing of all performers in the glossary serves, presumably unwittingly despite one contributor making the point explicitly themselves, to reiterate the predominance of white males in '80s independent music.

In interviewing Sushil, Nige speaks to just one of two people of colour among the 94 musicians all told. In talking to Vickie and Maggie, plus the then Pastels drummer Bernice Simpson (now a major player in Big Pharma and a pioneer in fairtrade contraceptives), he catches up with 30% of the compilation's female performers (all condensed into five bands, none appearing earlier than track 11). The days of, say, Indietracks' line-up gender parity feel a long way off.

The passing of such a long period of time also, inevitably, increased the likelihood of that total of 94 personnel having been depleted in number in the meantime. Even so, the revelation that three-quarters of Hebden Bridge's finest musical outsiders Bogshed were lost to cancer before reaching their sixties (including Nige's interviewee, the caricaturist Mike Bryson, prior to publication) was genuinely saddening, the most poignant moment in a book not otherwise devoid of them.

An involving and affecting read, therefore, and one which can't help but lead those of us who have grown up with the compilation (it was certainly among my earliest purchases from the late Rae Donaldson at the Vinyl Exchange) to listen to it again with fresh insight. Not that prior knowledge of C86 would necessarily be a prerequisite to enjoying its accessible, easily digestible 400 pages.

It will also make you love some people - John Peel, the ruinously generous Dave Parsons of Ron Johnson Records - even more than you ever did previously; make you eyeroll at BBC session producer (and former Mott the Hoople drummer) Dale Griffin's sniffiness towards musicians bigger on heart and creativity than stultifying proficiency; and make you realise Denise Johnson and Martin Duffy were far from the first collaborators whose treatment by Bobby Gillespie left something to be desired...

LIST 241 - 21/02/2026

Hello there,

Here's something to tie you over during the half-term holidays - two Lists this weekend rather the one.  And in a blog not short of personal indulgences, I fear that today's is probably the biggest yet.

Despite being a format broadly suited to one, That Music List doesn't exist as a radio show.  It has never come close to doing so, and I suspect it never will.  Those of you reading this (and there won't be many in the middle of this Venn Diagram) who are also familiar with my eight-year tenure (2007-2015) as a horse racing pundit on the radio will be as aware as I am of my limitations as a broadcaster - too quick, quiet and unnecessarily convoluted a delivery when conciseness and clarity better fit the constraints of time.  

Given another crack at it in the present day, I suspect that, now in my fifties, I'd find those traits are more baked in than ever.  Oh well.

However, in a parallel universe where I didn't carry on like Kafka with concussion behind a microphone, and TML did transfer to the airwaves, two of today's tracks would have appeared in every show.  

I've long loved Holland Street by The Field Mice, one of relatively few instrumentals in their published oeuvre (hence its inclusion here in the No Language In Our Lungs feature) and one that evokes thoughts of glistening urban streets at sunrise the morning after the rain in some celebrated small-budget flick.  

It's also the one song I've long thought absolutely perfect to play after the opening track of a radio show; the one over which, in appropriately truncated form, I'd do my welcomes and introduce the show's contents.  Mark Radcliffe would use Sombre Reptiles by Brian Eno for the same purpose in his mid-1980s Piccadilly Radio show which informed a lot of my then burgeoning musical interests.  I guess that first planted the idea.

Although an older track by more than a decade, The Wild Places by Duncan Browne is a somewhat newer discovery for me, only really in the past five years.  It's certainly of its time, an example of such late-1970s defiantly adult-oriented pop-rock as continued to rage against punk's fire, and the stagecraft which accompanied the promotion of the track - essentially a leopardskin leotard-clad woman writhing on or around the performing Browne - is perhaps best confined to the annals.

This is a track which plays its best suit late on, however, in the form of a soaring, dramatic coda from around 4 minutes 18 seconds onwards.  "My favourite codas" isn't a feature on TML, though if it were, the example in The Wild Places would rate second only to the wildly playful example at the end of Taco's Europop cover of Puttin' on the Ritz.  It would serve much the same purpose at the end of my radio show as Holland Street at the start, being the penultimate track or even outro over which to wrap things up.

If you're feeling sufficiently indulgent, try doing your own voiceover on top of the relevant parts of either track.  I can neither confirm nor deny how often if at all I've done this, though you're of course free to guess.

As well as No Language In Our Lungs, another feature making its first appearance in a List today is A Tangle Of Jangle, a trio of tracks which broadly fall under the janglepop umbrella.  I've surprised myself, and probably those who know me, by including neither a Sarah Records nor a C86 track in this initial selection - next time, maybe.  

It is an international trio, at least, taking in Belfast (Language of Flowers), Limoges (Caramel) and Illinois (Star Tropics).  Members of the first-named would resurface in 2008 as the driving force behind Help Stamp Out Loneliness whom - and I understand it's sacrilege in some parts to say so - I never managed to warm to quite as much as this earlier incarnation.

None of them were released in 1997, and had they have been, they still wouldn't have been able to dynamite Flutter By Butterfly by Flowchart out of the way as my favourite song of the year.  They still wouldn't even now.  

There was a brief period in the late 1990s when I could trust the Wurlitzer Jukebox label implicitly, so consistently strong were their singles releases at the time; and this insistent, magical, looping pocket symphony, rather perfectly described by one organ then as "the moment at which Richard Wagner meets Walt Disney", was snapped up despite my having heard only one other Flowchart track previously.  

It's clearly a track which others hold dear also, the late Sean O'Neal having admitted in the sleeve notes to a later singles compilation that Flutter By Butterfly was the one track Flowchart always got asked for the most on their very occasional live forays.  Now that I would have liked to witness.

Anything else to mark your card about this time?  Well, it's all good (I would say that), but some other potential highlights include the world's coolest 72-year-old (Kim Gordon); the vital sound of Mexborough, circa 1979 (Hobbies Of Today); a prime example of Sabadell Sound, a Spanish variant of Italo Disco, replete with all its chief characteristics such as a long intro and a local performer with an English stage name (Alan Cook); the world's most sinister harmonium (Nico); and your favourite whimsical poet with your favourite indiepoppers (Brian Bilston & The Catenary Wires).

J xx


Click on the video to play each tune (links last checked as all working 18/02/2026).




NO LANGUAGE IN OUR LUNGS


FAVOURITE SONG OF THE YEAR: 1997


THEN AND NOW: Neosupervital

    






EUROTASTIC








A TANGLE OF JANGLE









IF WE DO, WE’LL KEEP IT ALIVE




LIST 244 - 07/03/2026

Hello again, (Quite a lengthy preamble even by my standards this week – feel free to scroll past if you’d rather be listening already than r...